Women's Health NP · Example layout
Wildflower Women's Health
Personalized gynecologic and reproductive care.
The Practice
Wildflower Women's Health.
Personalized gynecologic and reproductive care.
§ I·Visits that aren't rushed
The appointment has time built into it.
Most patients who arrive here have a version of the same experience behind them: a visit that ended before the actual question was asked. The appointment ran out of time, or the concern was answered with a reassurance that didn’t feel grounded in anything. This is not a complaint about medicine in general — it is a structural problem. Twelve minutes is not enough time for a contraception conversation, a perimenopause question, or anything involving a patient who isn’t sure how to say what she came to say.
The visits here are longer by design. An initial visit is scheduled at 45 minutes. A return visit for a known concern is 30. If the intake form indicates something sensitive — a history that needs space, a question that deserves preparation — the visit is extended before you arrive. You will not be cut off because the clock is running.
The credential matters too. A board-certified Women’s Health Nurse Practitioner is trained entirely in this domain — not as a generalist who also handles women’s health, but as a specialist whose training, board exam, and continuing education are specific to this. That is what WHNP-BC designates.
§ II·Life-stage care
Where you are in your life shapes what care looks like.
Seven stages. The same practice, the same provider, across all of them.
wildflower — life-stage index
01
Teen
- First well-woman visit, on your timeline.
- Cycle irregularity, acne, and mood questions taken seriously.
- Confidential — your information is yours.
02
Contraception
- All methods explained without steering.
- IUD placement and removal, implant, oral, patch, ring.
- "I want to stop" is as valid as "I want to start."
03
Preconception
- Planning visits before pregnancy — not just after.
- Medication review, nutritional guidance, genetic screening referrals.
- No pressure on timeline, in either direction.
04
Prenatal
- Low-risk prenatal care with continuity.
- The same provider, every visit, through delivery.
- Mental health screening built into every trimester.
05
Postpartum
- Visits at 2, 6, and 12 weeks — not just one.
- Postpartum mood disorders are common and treatable.
- Contraception planning when you are ready to discuss it.
06
Perimenopause
- Cycle changes, sleep disruption, and mood shifts are clinical — not in your head.
- Hormone evaluation, bone density conversation, symptom management.
- Usually begins earlier than patients expect.
07
Menopause
- HRT options reviewed carefully: oral, transdermal, vaginal.
- Sexual health and cardiovascular screening included.
- How long to continue — evidence-based, not reflexive.

Provider · I
§ III·Meet your provider
Maren Holloway
MSN, WHNP-BC
Maren built this practice around the appointments she kept wishing existed — long enough to get to the actual question, specific enough to address life stage rather than just chief complaint. She has been practicing women's health as a board-certified WHNP for eleven years.
WHNP-BC is the board-certified Women's Health Nurse Practitioner credential. It is a distinct specialty from family practice or OB/GYN — focused entirely on women's health across the lifespan.
§ IV·Concerns we hear
What patients say when they arrive here.
These are not hypothetical — they are the questions that come up most often in the first visit.
01
“I felt dismissed at my last visit.”
This is the single most common thing new patients say at the first appointment. It usually means the visit was too short to reach the real question, or that the concern was normalized away rather than examined. Here, the visit is built around your actual question — not the one on the intake form. If something is bothering you, it is worth 30 minutes, not 8.
02
“I don't know if I still need contraception counseling — I've been on the same method for years.”
Staying on the same method for years is very common, and so is not knowing whether it's still the right one. Methods that worked well at 24 may feel different at 34 or 42. A review visit covers whether your current method is still appropriate, what your options are, and what changes in your health history might matter. There is no wrong reason to ask.
03
“I've been told my symptoms are just stress.”
Stress is real, and it does affect the body. It is also true that hormone irregularity, thyroid issues, perimenopause onset, and several other conditions look like stress on a brief intake. Part of a thorough visit is ruling out the physical before attributing everything to the emotional. If the labs are unremarkable, we will say so — and we will tell you why.
04
“I'm not sure if what I'm experiencing postpartum is normal.”
The postpartum period is genuinely variable. Some of what feels wrong is temporary physiology; some is a mood disorder that responds well to treatment; some is a combination. The point of the postpartum visits at 2, 6, and 12 weeks is to answer this question at each stage, not just sign off on a single 6-week clearance. If something feels off at week 9, you can call.
§ V·Confidential consult
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